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Cable believes he will remain Raiders coach

Coach declines to comment on reports he assaulted former wife, girlfriend

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Chris Park / AP
Tom Cable says he is the coach of the Raiders and that he thought “my future is to be the coach of the Raiders.”
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updated 6:02 p.m. ET Nov. 2, 2009

ALAMEDA, Calif. - The Oakland Raiders enter their bye week in similar fashion to the way they started their season: coming off a close loss to the San Diego Chargers and with more allegations being thrown at coach Tom Cable.

What happened between a 24-20 season-opening loss to San Diego and Sunday’s 24-16 defeat has been more dysfunction around the NFL’s worst team over the past seven seasons.

The Raiders (2-6) have lost four games by at least 20 points, have taken dramatic steps back offensively and have been in the news for all the wrong reasons.

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Cable was accused in training camp of assaulting defensive assistant Randy Hanson and breaking his jaw. More allegations trickled out throughout the season before Cable was officially cleared by the Napa County district attorney late last month.

Soon after, Cable was hit with allegations that he has a history of violent behavior toward women. His first wife, Sandy Cable, and a former girlfriend, Marie Lutz, said in separate interviews on ESPN’s “Outside the Lines” that the first-year head coach physically abused them at various times during their relationships.

Cable acknowledged striking Sandy Cable with an open hand in a statement Sunday. Cable said the altercation happened more than 20 years ago and was the only time he’s ever touched a woman inappropriately. He stood by that statement Monday, declining to answer any questions on the topic.

When asked about his future, Cable responded: “I’m coaching the Raiders and I think my future is to be the coach of the Raiders.”

The players are mostly tuning out the off-field issues, focusing on improving a football team that is 26-76 since the start of the 2003 season.

“We’re not thinking about it and we’re not worried about the outside distractions,” tight end Zach Miller said. “We’re just focused on being a better football team.”

The Raiders have a lot of work to get there.

If one play could sum up the first half of the season for the Raiders it might have come on the final drive. On second-and-28 with Oakland trailing 24-16, JaMarcus Russell went back to pass and had no open receivers. That was because Louis Murphy and Johnnie Lee Higgins got tangled up with each other and both hit the ground.

That led to a sack by Shawne Merriman and Oakland was unable to mount a comeback.

“Everybody’s making a big deal about that,” Murphy said. “I heard some of my teammates said they showed it on TV. Actually, I had an inside release, and Johnnie an outside release and we ran into each other. I mean, it happens. You can find anything to pick out at the end of the game.”

It’s been that kind of season offensively for the Raiders, who have been unable to develop Russell into a big-play quarterback and have the kind of deep-strike offense that owner Al Davis loves so much.

The Raiders have scored just three touchdowns in the past six games, have failed to reach 200 yards of offense in five of eight games and are the lowest-ranked offense in the NFL.

“Everybody is looking for an answer right now,” Murphy said. “We have to continue to stay together as a team and continue to work hard, and continue in practice to work hard to drill our plays and continue to do what the coaches ask of us. Eventually it’s going to come out in the games.”

The Raiders could get some good news after the bye week with running back Darren McFadden, receiver Chaz Schilens and offensive linemen Robert Gallery and Cornell Green hoping to return from injuries. McFadden has begun running and cutting on his surgically repaired right knee and said he hopes to be ready to play against the Chiefs on Nov. 15

McFadden has been out since tearing cartilage in his right knee on Oct. 4 against Houston. He struggled even when he played, averaging 3.1 yards per carry.

While frequently saying he doesn’t want to use injuries as an excuse, Cable put the blame for much of the first-half woes on them. Cable is counting on Gallery solidifying the offensive line to create holes for McFadden and for Schilens to open up the struggling passing game.

“For one, you’re losing your best offensive lineman. That gives you a lot of solidity inside,” he said. “It will help open up the run game even more. You’re getting a receiver that can impact the game. Those are all things that lead, not only just to more yards, but, obviously, to more points.”

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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